J.J. Jackson Remembers Led Zeppelin: The Music and The Guys Who Made It
By Frank Reddon and Lou Anne Reddon
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About this ebook
Frank Reddon, author of the acclaimed book, Sonic Boom: The Impact of Led Zeppelin, has compiled six interviews that he conducted with J.J during the course of his research.
In an unprecedented move, Reddon made available to J.J. the live concert recordings of the legendary early gigs Jackson emceed for Zeppelin at The Boston Tea Party in January 1969. The two then discuss the music as only someone who was there at the time possibly could.
Foreword by Led Zeppelin author and editor of Tight But Loose magazine, Dave Lewis. Introduction by Martha Quinn - one of the five pioneering MTV video jocks who worked with J.J.
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J.J. Jackson Remembers Led Zeppelin - Frank Reddon
Preface
Led Zeppelin’s music has been a passion for most of my life. While conducting research for my book, Sonic Boom: The Impact of Led Zeppelin. Volume 1 – Break & Enter, I happened to meet a wonderful source of information at the Boston Public Library.
Pat Seward wasn’t a librarian, but a kind hearted, generous and free-spirited patron whose second home was the library’s microfiche department where we met. She spoke to me at great length about the club scene in Boston during the late 1960s. An art history major at the time, she was right into the music with her fellow college students.
She directed me to the original location of The Boston Tea Party at 53 Berkeley Street, where Led Zeppelin performed January 26-29, 1969. She introduced to me the name of Chet Helms. It would be several years before I tracked down that particular lead but, when I did, it opened up the whole West Coast and led me to the most amazing people, stories and research treasures.
Most importantly to the story I’m about to tell you now, Pat dropped the name of J.J. Jackson. I had heard of him, but in connection to him being a VJ/DJ with Westwood One in Los Angeles.
Pat assured me that J.J. Jackson and Peter Wolf (later of J. Geils Band fame) were both on the scene at The Tea Party when Led Zeppelin performed there. Peter Wolf was playing in the venue’s house band, The Hallucinations; J.J. was working for radio station WBCN as a deejay.
It was not easy to get in touch with J.J. Jackson. It took about six months of contact and trust-building. It was time well spent! As it turned out, J.J. was indeed instrumental to Led Zeppelin’s success during those early years. He also became very close friends with the musicians.
That’s why he had been so wary of speaking to me initially. J.J. was an extremely loyal friend to Robert, Jimmy, John Paul and Bonzo. He would do nothing to breach their confidence.
Over the course of our correspondence, we developed a friendship based on our mutual love of Led Zeppelin’s music. J.J. was exceptionally generous with his time, recollections and inside anecdotes. He even sent me some photographs from his personal collection.
He really enjoyed listening to some of the live concert recordings in my collection. And he was absolutely thrilled to relive his past with Led Zeppelin this way! The more we talked, the more excited and enthusiastic he became about my research project. You can see for yourself as I share with you my interviews with him, in chronological order.
J.J. and I spoke three or four times, resulting in the six interviews presented here. The text of the first one you’re about to read appears in its entirety in Sonic Boom/Volume 1. The printed book features many more artefacts and illustrations; because of copyrights, permissions and other legalities, it was impossible to reproduce the fully illustrated account in this e-book.
In the second interview, J.J. provided me a detailed analysis of the music on Led Zeppelin’s self-titled debut album, which was released in North America by Atlantic Records on January 12, 1969 – just two weeks prior to Zep’s headlining run at The Boston Tea Party. This second interview will appear in full in my upcoming book, Sonic Boom: The Impact of Led Zeppelin. Volume 2 – You Shook U.S. The publication date has yet to be determined.
Please note that excerpts from this second interview have already appeared in the November 2007 issue of our online newsletter, the Enzepplozine. But the entire interview has never before been published. So, even if you read that issue of the Enzepplozine I just mentioned, you still won’t have read all the details you’re about to discover in this e-book.
Interviews 3 through 6 have never been made public before in ANY form. There’s plenty of brand-new information here to please and delight any Led Zeppelin fan or music scholar.
J.J. Jackson moved from the East Coast to the West, where he became one of the five first-ever video jocks for MTV. One of his fellow pioneers in the medium was Martha Quinn who remains a popular VJ to this day. We’re delighted that Ms. Quinn agreed to contribute her personal and professional recollections of her dear friend and colleague, J.J. in this edition of our e-book.
On a much sadder note…
J.J. Jackson passed away on March 18, 2004. I will always cherish the time he so generously spent with me, discussing our mutual musical interests and sharing his enthusiasm. It was a genuine privilege to have known him.
He was very anxious to see my book in print and I deeply regret that he never had the chance. I would like to dedicate this e-book to his memory with my most sincere appreciation for his friendship and support.
Now it’s time for you to enjoy J.J. Jackson’s inside look at the world of Led Zeppelin.
Feedback – good or bad – is always welcome. I’d love to hear what you think of these interviews.
C’mon. Let’s rock!
PFRSig.pngFrank Reddon, Author
Sonic Boom: The Impact of Led Zeppelin
Foreword by Dave Lewis
When Led Zeppelin touched down in America on December 26, 1968, they were a relatively unknown quantity. Manager Peter Grant hoped that the past reputation of The Yardbirds’ latter era and the strategic distribution of advance copies of the band’s soon-to-be-released debut album simply titled Led Zeppelin would help establish this new act.
By good fortune, one of those advance copies fell into the hands of a deejay at Boston radio station WBCN by the name of J.J. Jackson. Within a month of Led Zeppelin’s arrival, their album was climbing the Billboard charts and the band was selling out prestigious venues such as The Boston Tea Party.
Their success in key areas such as Boston was aided considerably by the enthusiasm for their music generated by J.J. Jackson. It was the beginning of a cherished relationship between J.J. and Zeppelin that would encompass the rest of the band’s career.
Peter Grant and the band never forgot the debt they owed the legendary deejay in helping build their reputation in those early days.
It was therefore J.J. Jackson whom Robert Plant singled out for dedication before performing Since I’ve Been Loving You at Los Angeles’ Inglewood Forum on June 26, 1977. It was J.J. Jackson that Robert and John Paul Jones were happy to talk to immediately after the epic Knebworth shows in 1979. And even after the band’s demise, it was J.J. Jackson to whom Robert opened up in one of his first post-Zep TV interviews on MTV.
J.J. Jackson was a music man in the grand tradition of Ahmet Ertegün. A gracious, intelligent man who totally understood what Led Zeppelin was all about. That fact is more than evident throughout the fascinating conversations that follow.
Dave Lewis
July 2009
Publisher’s Note:
Dave Lewis is recognized worldwide for his superlative contribution to the body of literature about Led Zeppelin. He has written, co-authored and published many books about the group. Since 1978, he has chronicled the legendary band in his all-Zeppelin magazine, Tight But Loose.
His most recent book is a compilation that commemorates the 30th anniversary of Led Zeppelin’s landmark concerts at Knebworth - performances which Dave and the subject of this e-book, J.J. Jackson - both attended.
That such a luminary in the Led Zeppelin world should agree to contribute to our e-book is a distinct honour and a special privilege. We are deeply and forever grateful.
Frank Reddon, Author and Lou Anne Reddon, Editor. Enzepplopedia Publishing, Inc.
Introduction by Martha Quinn
Editor’s note: Frank and I were delighted when Martha Quinn graciously agreed to share her recollections of her co-worker and friend, the late J.J. Jackson.
In 1981, Martha and J.J., along with Nina Blackwood, Mark Goodman and Alan Hunter, became the first-ever video jocks (VJs). These five oh-so-cool pioneers were there to launch the then-new enterprise, Music TV (MTV).
Martha continues to work in the music business as an actor and director. It is an honour for us to include her fond words of tribute to this beloved friend of hers - and Led Zeppelin’s.
L.A. Reddon
J.J. Jackson and I worked together as part of the world’s first VJ team at MTV in 1981. At the time, I thought I knew all I needed to know about my co-worker, friend and confidant. Ah, the folly of youth!
JJ passed away in 2004. As time has progressed, I’ve been able to do with JJ as he talks in these pages of having done with Led Zeppelin: put him in an historical context.
Now I can clearly see the rock’n’roll heavyweight JJ truly was.
He conducted Bruce Springsteen’s first-ever TV interview.
He was instrumental in the careers of Rod Stewart and The Who.
And then, there’s Led Zeppelin. JJ Jackson, original MTV VJ, has been credited by Zeppelin as having been crucial to the band’s success in the US and, therefore, worldwide.
In 1969, JJ was a DJ at Boston’s legendary radio station, WBCN. He played for his audience a test-pressing of Jimmy Page’s new project. It was the debut album for Page’s new band, Led Zeppelin.
JJ was playing it for his audience before the album had even been released in the US. The enthusiasm for what JJ heard in the grooves whipped his audience into a frenzy.
Led Zeppelin’s first Boston
